Yarra Valley Water

Yarra Valley Water
Agency overview
Formed1 January 1995
Preceding agencies
JurisdictionGovernment of Victoria
Headquarters25-35 Lucknow Street, Mitcham, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Employees800+
Minister responsible
Agency executives
  • Pat McCafferty, Managing Director
  • Gabrielle Bell, Chair of the Board
  • Rob Skinner AM, Deputy Chair
  • Victor Perton, Director
  • Mary Kanavoutsos, Director
  • Robyn McLeod AM, Director
  • Karen Milward, Director
  • Victoria Marles AM, Director
  • Kate Vinot, Director
Parent departmentDepartment of Health (Victoria)
Websitehttps://www.yvw.com.au/

Yarra Valley Water is a Victorian Government-owned retail water corporation and the largest of the three water corporations that service metropolitan Melbourne. It provides drinking water, sewerage, trade waste, recycled water, and water-saving services to over two million people and over 61,000 businesses in the northern and eastern suburbs of Melbourne, or around 30% of Victoria's population. The water distributed by Yarra Valley Water is supplied by Melbourne Water, as is the infrastructure. Oversight is provided by the Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action.

Yarra Valley Water's district covers approximately 4,000 square kilometres from as far north as Wallan and extending to Warburton in the east. Yarra Valley Water owns and maintains over 10,400km of water mains and over 10,300km of sewer mains.

As a government-owned corporation, Yarra Valley Water is a public entity that operates on a commercial model. Its activities are overseen by an independent Board of Directors appointed by the Victorian Government. Day-to-day management and administration are delegated to the Managing Director and Executive Team. Yarra Valley Water's head office is situated in Mitcham and employs around 800 staff.

Yarra Valley Water has committed to achieving net-zero emissions as part of its "beyond zero carbon" initiative. From 1 July 2025, the corporation achieved the milestone of being powered by 100% renewable electricity and is on track to report net-zero Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions for the 2025-26 financial year, four years ahead of its government obligations. The organisation is also working to reduce Scope 3 emissions, with a target of a 67% reduction by 2030 from a 2023-24 baseline. Efforts include installation of solar PV production facilities at various Yarra Valley Water-owned sites, and the use of its food waste to energy facilities.